Irish Wedding Blog
Latest wedding news, celebrity engagement gossip…
Latest wedding news, celebrity engagement gossip…

We’ve recently added Milehigh Wedding Band to the Music section of our Supplier Directory.
Milehigh is a lively five piece wedding band who travels nationwide. They can also provide music for your wedding ceremony and drinks reception. Milehigh can provide a band and DJ package for your wedding reception.
Click here to view Milehigh Wedding Band on our mrs2be Wedding Supplier Directory.
We’ve recently added Nicky McDonnell to the Wedding Photographers section of our Supplier Directory.
Nicky travels nationwide free of charge, and has various wedding photography packages available: CD only, Storybooks or traditional albums, or even a combined photo/video package. She also offers Boudoir photo shoots.
Click here to view Nicky McDonnell Photography on our mrs2be Supplier Directory.
We’ve recently added Paramount Promotions to the Music section of our Supplier Directory.
Parmount Promotions is an entertainment agency, and can cater for your wedding day’s entire music and entertainment needs.
Specialised wedding packages are geared to providing you with a range of entertainment throughout the day at a very reasonable rate. Packages include church singers, reception music, wedding band and dj and can be tailored to suit your needs.
Click here to view Parmount Promotions on our mrs2be Supplier Directory.
White Orchid Bridal Boutique’s Summer Sunshine Sale runs until Saturday the 7th of August. Brides who purchase their bridal gowns will receive a 10% discount on the price of their gown. There are also amazing special offers on bridesmaid’s gowns, accessories and veils.
White Orchid are also holding their immensely popular Summer Sample Sale, with up to 70% off many designer sample gowns including Tara Keely, WODA, Linea Raffaelli, Mikaella, Art Couture, Bellice and bridesmaids gowns from Alvina Valenta and Forever Yours. All sample gowns are in excellent condition and reduced to astounding prices. A limited number of Sample gowns from 2010 collections will be on sale.
To book an appointment please call 01 8971494.
Remember to join White Orchid on Facebook to keep up to date on the latest White Orchid news and special offers
For those of you who don’t know me, first a little intro. When my fiancé, Mr Mc, and I, first started planning our wedding, I found it difficult to find blogs written from the couples prespective that were relevant to an Irish couple looking to have a wedding that was relaxed and fun, didn’t cost the earth and had some personality about it. So I decided to set one up myself, tinkerbellesbridalblog. As well as charting my journey through the choppy waters of wedding plan, I’ve hopefully developed a useful resource that features a collection of ideas, tips and DIY projects for other brides (and grooms) to be. I’m certainly no wedding expert but as a result of my research for the blog and my day job which involves a lot of event planning a few things have become clear.
Prioritise. Once you get engaged and the excitement and expectations begin to build it can feel like your sucked up by a wedding whirlwind. Floating about in a swirling cloud of taffeta, champagne bubbles, ribbons and rose blossoms it’s easy to lose perspective on what really matters. There is so much wedding ‘stuff’ out there, it’s easy to get blown off course from the wedding you actually wanted in the beginning. So take some time to sit down with your fiancé at an early stage and decide what are the things which are most important to you both for the day, what are the ‘nice-to-haves’ and what are the ‘can-do-withouts’. Then write it all down and allocate your budget accordingly. The list will ensure you stick to your guns n’roses and avoid giving in to glossy wedding magazine induced desires that can seriously eat into your precious wedding budget. Remember the wedding you both set out to achieve and do what it takes (within reason, budget and the law) to achieve it – all the other ‘stuff’ is nonsense.
Use your Imagination. This is your day, it should look and feel like your day, not a ‘copy and paste’ version of every wedding you’ve ever been too. Reflect your personalities in creative ways throughout the day. There are countless ways to do this, through your clothes, the music, the venue, the invites. DIY with care. Regular readers of my blog will know I’m a big fan of DIY wedding projects. They are a great way to personalise the day and make some serious savings but it can be easy to take on too much and most brides don’t picture themselves elbow deep in sticky back tape and scissors on the morning of their wedding so chose your projects with care. The further in advance they can be done the better and remember most family and friends will be only delighted to lend a hand.
Learn the art of compromise. I have a real stubborn streak and hate it when I don’t get my own way so this one is a tricky one for me. Yes, it is you and your fiancé’s big day and of course what you both want should take precedence but remember it’s also a big day for your loved ones. It’s inevitable that some of their expectations will differ from your own and this can lead to disagreements. Try and see things from their perspective and once it’s not going to fundamentally change what you have planned for the day, be prepared to give in and every now and then. I’ve heard rumours that compromise is a big part of marriage, so think of it as practice!
Remember, you’re planning a wedding not figuring out how to stop global warming. It’s very easy to get totally absorbed in planning your wedding and for everything else in your life to seem suddenly less important. Your wedding is just one day, twenty four hours and it will be all over. Try and keep a perspective on things and if you find that the ‘W’ word just keeps worming its way into your conversations, set yourself limits on how much you can think or talk about it each day. I speak from experience on this one – my Dad’s introduction of a 30 minute rule in the run up to my sister’s wedding, limiting wedding-related conversations to a half an hour, stopped us from floating off into wedding la-la-la anytime there were two or more women in the house.
Set a cut off date then delegate. The last few days before your wedding should be fun and exciting, not fraught with stress. Things like mass booklets and favours should be done and dusted long before the big day. Plan to get everything that you can do in advanced finished a week before the wedding and then delegate any of the things that have to be done last minute. If you give plenty of notice and ask politely most friends and family will be only too happy to get involved and lend a hand.
Don’t worry, Be married! I’ve never been to a wedding where something didn’t go wrong. Florists mix up the dates, cakes get damaged, dresses get trod on – this is the universal truth about weddings. Your wedding will be no different! It’s akin to a basic law of physics, something always goes wrong at a wedding. I have it on good authority from women of many different generations that faced with this inevitably, brides (and indeed grooms) are left with only one real course of action. On the morning of your wedding, when you wake up (assuming you managed to sleep), remind yourself of the fact that today you will marry your favourite person in the whole world. Even if your driver doesn’t show up, they play the wrong music at the church and they burn the main course at the reception , that fact makes you the luckiest person on the planet and nothing is going to stop you from having an amazing day.